Help Move Georgia Forward
Medical residency applications down “in states where abortion is illegal or significantly restricted”
A new report from KFF Health News of data from the Association of American Medical Colleges says that “for the second year running, fewer graduating U.S. medical students applied for residency training in states with abortion bans or restrictions than in the previous year.”
The report states that since many doctors choose to reside permanently in the area in which they do their residency, this trend could significantly limit the number of doctors in states like Georgia for decades to come — and exacerbate the current dearth of doctors in rural areas.
The report outlines a persistent reason cited for the shift away from abortion-ban states was that the medical education received there is sub-par, at least in obstetrics and gynecology. Doctors in these states learn the techniques used for abortion — which are also used to treat miscarriages and other conditions — but they have to leave the state to train on them.
“Brian Kemp’s abortion ban has made it dangerous to practice medicine or even have a child in Georgia,” said DPG spokesperson Ellie Schwartz. “As Brian Kemp’s political choices repel qualified doctors from Georgia, rather than admit a mistake, he’s content to let Georgia’s women and families suffer the consequences.”
Georgia’s 6-week abortion ban is one of the strictest in the country.
These students’ concerns included their ability to practice medicine, but also their own health and that of their partners. As Stulberg continued, “people don’t feel safe potentially having their own pregnancies living in those states.”
Read the story from WABE below:
WABE: Abortion bans in Georgia and other states are repelling the nation’s future doctors
Julie Rovner, KFF News; 5/21/2024
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September 11, 2024
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